Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 394South Africa
Landrover Financial Services,a product of Wesbank, a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Phiri (13690/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 394 (5 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 May 2022
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judgment.
Judgment
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## Landrover Financial Services,a product of Wesbank, a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Phiri (13690/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 394 (5 May 2022)
Landrover Financial Services,a product of Wesbank, a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Phiri (13690/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 394 (5 May 2022)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 13690/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
5/05/2022
In
the matter between:
LANDROVER
FINANCIAL SERVICES, A PRODUCT
Plaintiff
OF
WESBANK, A DIVISION OF FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED
And
MR
FRANK
PHIRI
Defendant
JUDGMENT
WINDELL,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is an opposed
application for summary judgment.
[2] On 25 May 2018, the
plaintiff (“the Bank”) and the defendant (“Mr
Phiri”) concluded an instalment sale
agreement (“the
credit agreement”) for the purchase of a 2008 Land Rover
Defender Puma 110 SW (“the vehicle”).
Mr Phiri had to pay
the Bank the amount of R413,933.04: an initial deposit of R50,000.00
and 72 equal instalments of R5,749.07
on the first day of each month
until the expiry of the credit agreement. It is common cause that the
Bank would remain the owner
of the vehicle until Mr Phiri had
discharged his indebtedness under the credit agreement. Mr Phiri
breached the terms of the credit
agreement by failing to maintain
regular monthly payments.
[3] The Bank seeks an
order for the cancellation the credit agreement and seeks the return
of the motor vehicle and the postponement
of the damages claim
sine
die
.
[4]
Mr Phiri has filed a plea and resists the summary judgment on two
bases: One, he alleges that the Bank did not conduct an assessment
in
compliance with Section 81(2) of the National Credit Act (“NCA”),
[1]
and, as a result, the extension of the credit was reckless.
[2]
Two, he denies receiving the Section 129 notice.
[5] I will deal with each
one of the two defences raised separately down below.
RECKLESS CREDIT
[6]
In terms of Rule 32(3)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court, a defendant
must
satisfy the court by affidavit, or
with the leave of the court by oral evidence …
..”
that the defendant has a bona fide defence to the action.
The sub-rule also states that “
such
affidavit or evidence shall disclose fully the nature and grounds of
the defence and the material facts relied upon therefor.”
[7]
The Supreme Court of Appeal (“the SCA”) in
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture,
[3]
with
reference
to
Maharaj v Barclays National Bank Ltd
,
[4]
held that this means that there must, firstly, be sufficient
disclosure by a defendant of the nature and grounds of his defence
and the facts upon which it is founded, and, secondly the defence so
disclosed must be both
bona
fide
and good in law. The defendant need not deal exhaustively with the
facts and the evidence relied upon to substantiate them, but
must at
least disclose the defence and the material facts upon which it is
based with sufficient particularity and completeness
to enable the
court to decide whether the affidavit discloses a
bona
fide
defence.
The SCA reiterated that summary judgment procedure was not intended
to shut a defendant out from defending, unless
it was very clear
indeed that he had no case in the action. It was intended to prevent
sham defences from defeating the rights
of parties by delay, and at
the same time causing great loss to plaintiffs who were endeavoring
to enforce their rights.
[5]
Failure to comply with these provisions will not necessarily mean,
however, that summary judgment will follow. In accordance
with
the provisions of Rule 32(5), the court retains an overriding
discretion to refuse summary judgment.
[8]
In
SA
Taxi Securitisation v Mbatha and Two Similar Cases,
[6]
the court noted that since
the
enactment of the NCA, there seems to be a tendency for defendants,
when taken to court to enforce credit agreements, to make
bland
allegations that they are 'over-indebted' or that there has been
'reckless credit'. Levenberg AJ held that “
these
allegations, like any other allegations made in a defendant's
affidavit opposing summary judgment, should not be 'inherently
and
seriously unconvincing', should contain a reasonable amount of
verificatory detail, and should not be 'needlessly bald,
vague or
sketchy'. A bald allegation that there was 'reckless credit' or there
is 'over-indebtedness' will not suffice
.
[7]
[9] In
Collett
v Firstrand Bank Ltd,
[8]
the SCA found that over-indebtedness is not a defence on the merits,
but because of summary judgment’s extraordinary and
stringent
nature, these issues may be raised, “
not
as a defence to the claim, but as a request to the court not to grant
summary judgment in the exercise of its overriding
discretion.”
The court, however, emphasized that sufficient information (in that
instance the facts in support of a request
for a resumption of
the debt review) must be placed before the court.
[10]
In
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Kelly,
[9]
Binns-Ward
J formulated the inquiry in relation to reckless credit as follows:
"In
the context of opposing an application for summary judgment on the
grounds that an adequate risk assessment did not precede
the
conclusion of the credit agreement, and that a consequent entitlement
has arisen to a declaration that the credit agreement
was reckless
and an attendant order in terms of section 83(2) of the Act, the
defendant is therefore required to set out the pertinent
facts in
support of his/her opposition in the manner required by Uniform Rule
32(3)''.
[11]
It is with these principles in mind that this
court has to examine Mr Phiri’s affidavit and establish whether
it has complied
with the sub-rule.
Were
the grounds of the defence of reckless credit set out sufficiently?
[12]
Section
80 of the NCA, dealing with reckless credit, reads as
follows:
“
(1)
A credit agreement is reckless if, at the time that the agreement was
made, ……
(a)
the
credit provider failed to conduct an assessment as required by
section 81(2), irrespective of what the outcome of such an assessment
might have concluded at the time; or…
(b)
the
credit provider, having conducted an assessment as required by
section 81(2), entered into the credit agreement with the consumer
despite the fact that the preponderance of information available to
the credit provider indicated that-
(i)
the consumer did not generally understand or appreciate the
consumer's risks, costs or obligations under the proposed credit
agreement; or
(ii)
entering into that credit agreement would make the consumer
over-indebted."
[13]
In its particulars of claim the Bank pleads that it had complied with
the provisions of the NCA and that it conducted an assessment
as
required by section 81(2).
In
terms of section 81(2), a credit provider may generally conclude a
credit agreement with a prospective consumer only after it
has done a
proper and reasonable assessment and concludes that the consumer will
be able to satisfy all his obligations under all
his credit
agreements, including the prospective credit agreement. The
compulsory assessment requires that a credit provider
not only does
an affordability (financial) assessment of the consumer, but also
assesses the consumer's debt history and tests
the consumer's general
understanding of the risks, cost and obligations of the credit
agreement.
[14]
Mr Phiri denies that the Bank
complied with the provisions of the NCA. As stated earlier, Mr Phiri
is obliged to set out the nature
and grounds of his defence. In his
affidavit resisting summary judgment he merely copied the words in
section 80 and baldly stated
that:
“
4.1
……. the Plaintiff failed to conduct a proper assessment
as required by section 81 (2) of the National Credit Act.
4.2 I was not
requested to provide the Plaintiff with all information as it relates
to my financial means, prospects and obligations
and therefore failed
to provide same.
4.3 The Plaintiff
concluded the agreement with me in circumstances where I did not
understand or appreciate the risks and costs
associated with the
conclusion of the agreement. Neither did I understand my rights and
obligations at the time when the agreement
was concluded.”
[15]
In
an article titled “
A
credit provider's complete defence against a consumer's allegation of
reckless lending”
[10]
,
the
author asserts
that
a finding that a credit agreement constitutes reckless credit has
many adverse consequences for a credit provider. She states
that:
“
By
invoking the reckless-lending provisions, a consumer is substantially
protected, particularly when a credit provider who contravened
these
provisions tries to enforce the reckless credit agreement against the
consumer. Unfortunately, these reckless-lending provisions
carry with
them the risk of abuse by some consumers. To limit this abuse,
measures were included in the NCA to prevent consumers
from abusing
these provisions. For instance, section 81(1) requires that when a
consumer applies for a credit agreement, and while
that application
is being considered by the credit provider, the prospective consumer
must fully and truthfully answer any requests
for information made by
the credit provider while the credit provider is assessing whether to
grant the credit. In addition, section
81(4) provides that it is a
complete defence to an allegation that a credit agreement is
reckless, if the credit provider proves
that the consumer failed to
answer fully and truthfully any requests for information made by the
credit provider as part of the
compulsory assessment required by
section 81, and if a court or the National Consumer Tribunal
determines that the consumer's failure
to do so materially affected
the ability of the credit provider to make a proper assessment.”
[16]
Mr Phiri did not plead that the Bank did
not conduct an affordability assessment, but pleaded that it was not
a "proper assessment".
The only
paragraph in Mr Phiri’s affidavit in which he attempts to set
out facts in support of the defence of reckless credit
is paragraph
4.2 in which Mr Phiri pleads that he did not provide the plaintiff
with
all
information in respect of his financial means, prospects and
obligations and was not requested to do so (emphasis added).
Mr
Phiri does not plead anywhere in his plea or affidavit how (i) his
financial information was requested and (ii) how the information
he
did not provide did not fall in the category of the information that
was requested.
Section
81(4) of the NCA obliges the consumer to disclose information "fully
and truthfully", failing which the consumer
is barred from
raising a defence of reckless credit.
[17]
The facts in the
SA
Taxi
matter, are similar to the facts
in casu
.
In their opposing affidavit in that matter, the defendants pleaded
that the credit agreement constituted a reckless agreement
as
contemplated in section 80 of the NCA in that, (1) the plaintiff
failed to conduct an assessment as required of it under section
80(1)(a) of the NCA and, (2) even if an assessment was made (which is
denied), the preponderance of information available to the
plaintiffs
would clearly have shown that the defendants did not understand or
appreciate the risk, costs and obligations thereof.
In addition, the
defendants in
SA Taxi
pleaded that as a result of this failure the defendants are “
entitled
to an order setting aside and suspending the Agreement as
contemplated in s 83(2) of the NCA.”
It
bears mention at this stage that Mr Phiri did not plead that he is
entitled to an order setting aside the credit agreement as
contemplated in section 83 (2) of the NCA.
[18]
I agree with Levenberg AJ in
SA Taxi,
that in relying on a defence of reckless credit a defendant should
provide some particularity concerning the negotiations leading
up to
the conclusion of the credit agreement; should identify the parties
involved in the negotiations, to the extent that the
defendant is
able to do so; and should have disclosed details concerning any
credit application that he signed and the circumstances
in which he
signed those credit applications. Levenberg AJ further held that to
the extent that each defendant wishes to avail
itself of section
80(1)(b) (namely that the consumer
did
not generally understand or appreciate the consumer's risks, costs or
obligations under the proposed credit agreement)
a
defendant should have provided information demonstrating his level of
education and experience at the time relating to the risk
of
incurring credit; details of all of his indebtedness at the time that
the credit agreement was concluded, as well as information
concerning
the defendant’s potential income and expenditure. Lastly,
information should have been provided concerning a defendant’s
current level of indebtedness, and income and expenditure, in order
to enable the court to evaluate whether the court might, in
the
exercise of its discretion, either set aside the credit agreement, or
suspend it.
[19]
Similarly, in the present matter, i
f
Mr Phiri alleges that credit had been granted recklessly because no
assessment was made before the credit was granted, he should
have
given the details of the negotiations leading up to the conclusion of
the credit agreement, and should have, at least, identified
the
parties to the negotiations. He should also have disclosed details
regarding any credit application that he signed and the
circumstances
in which he signed it. Moreover, Mr Phiri did not disclose the nature
and content of the financial information he
in fact disclosed to the
plaintiff when the assessment was done. He did not provide details of
his income and expenses at the time
he applied for the loan or what
they are currently. This information would have assisted this court
to evaluate whether there is
a basis for the allegation that no
assessment was conducted under the Act.
In
the present matter Mr Phiri gave no information whatsoever. Moreover,
he did not plead that he is entitled to an order setting
aside the
credit agreement as contemplated in section 83(2) of the NCA. This
failure is, in my view, fatal to his defence.
[20]
The defence of reckless credit is under the circumstances bald,
unsubstantiated and unconvincing.
It does not contain a
reasonable amount of verificatory detail and is merely raised for the
purposes of delay.
The delivery of the
vehicle.
[21]
If a court declares a credit agreement to be reckless, it can,
in terms of section 83 of the NCA either 'set aside' the
consumer's
'rights and obligations' in whole or in part, or suspend the force
and effect of the credit agreement. As alluded to
earlier,
Mr
Phiri did not plead
that he is entitled to an
order setting aside the credit agreement as contemplated in section
83(2) of the NCA.
[22]
In any event, Masipa J in the matter of
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v
Panayiotts
[11]
(which
dealt with a defence of over-indebtedness) held that the NCA did not
envisage that a consumer could claim to be over-indebted
while he or
she retained possession of the goods which formed the subject-matter
of the credit agreement. The goods had to be sold
to reduce the
defendant’s indebtedness. She further held that allowing the
debtor to remain in possession of the item of
security whilst it
depreciated in value was prejudicial to the creditor. This also holds
true in the present matter.
[23] In
SA Taxi
,
Levenberg AJ held that although section 84(1)(c) contemplates
that the credit provider will not be entitled to enforce its
rights
during the period of suspension, that sub-section must be read with
sub-section 84(1)(a) and (b). He held that
it is
significant that, in relation to the suspension of a credit
agreement, section 84 of the NCA focuses on whether the consumer
is
required to make payments or is obliged to pay any
interest, fee or other charge during the period of suspension
and
that there was therefore no basis for reading into the language of
the NCA a provision that, when suspension is appropriate,
the court
also has the power to permit the consumer to utilise the security in
a manner which will permit it to deteriorate
during the period
of suspension. At paragraph [46] to [50] he states as follows:
“
[46]
It seems unlikely that the legislature ever intended that the
consumer could keep the 'money and the box'. If the consumer
obtained
possession and use of a motor vehicle in circumstances in which
no credit should have been extended to the consumer,
it would be
fundamentally unfair and counterproductive for the consumer to
continue to use the vehicle, while at the same time
not making any
payments under the agreement;
[47] If the consumer
has a valid complaint that, but for the recklessness of the
credit provider, the consumer would never
have become involved in the
credit transaction, it might be 'just and reasonable' to 'set aside'
the agreement. In that event the
agreement would be null and void,
and as if it had never been. As a consequence, the credit provider,
who remains the owner of
the vehicle, would be entitled to
restoration of the vehicle. On the other hand, the consumer, who no
longer has any obligations
under the agreement that has been set
aside, would be relieved of any further indebtedness or deficiency
claim under the agreement.
In certain circumstances, this would be a
fair and symmetrical resolution;
[48] On the other
hand, if the effect of the agreement is merely suspended, all
elements of the agreement would have to
be suspended. This would
mean that the consumer would not be entitled to continue to retain
possession of the vehicle during the
period of suspension. At the
same time, the consumer would not have to make any payments under the
agreement during the suspension
period;
[50] That the NCA does
not contemplate the consumer retaining 'the money and the box' is
also borne out by the provisions of s 130(1)
of the NCA. That
section provides that the failure of a consumer to surrender its
security is a factor that militates in favour
of immediate
enforcement of the credit agreement by the credit provider.”
[24]
I agree with the reasoning of the court in
SA
Taxi
. The court must balance the rights
of the creditor with those of the debtor. It cannot give the debtor
more rights than was envisaged
in the credit agreement between the
parties as well as the NCA.
In
the present matter there is no information in the affidavit resisting
summary judgment or the plea to indicate on what basis
a court might
be persuaded, or as to why it might consider it just and reasonable
to set aside all or part of Mr Phiri’s
obligations as permitted
in terms of s 83(2)(a) of the NCA. In the circumstances, Mr Phiri
cannot be said to have set out the material
facts upon which his
defence is based with sufficient particularity and completeness to
satisfy the court that a
bona
fide
defence
has been disclosed.
Old v New Rule
[25] Counsel for the
defendant submits that both the
Standard Bank
and the
SA
Taxi
judgment were determined under the old Rule 32 and that the
courts’ comments as far as they relate to reckless lending,
must
therefore be adjudicated against the background of the old Rule
32. It is contended that under the previous regime, a plaintiff
would
approach the court for summary judgement before a defendant has filed
a plea and he would have raised this defence for the
first time in
his affidavit opposing summary judgment. The court’s
requirements in
SA Taxi
where it stated that a defendant is
required to provide certain information (as set out in paragraphs 56,
56.1, 56.2, 56.3 and
56.4) should therefore be considered in the
context of the old Rule 32. It is submitted that under the new Rule
32, this is not
relevant anymore, as the plaintiff is now in a
position to address a defendant’s defence of reckless credit
and the allegation
that no proper credit assessment was done. In the
event that such an assessment was done, this information should be in
the possession
of the plaintiff if the credit assessment had been
done, and should be placed before the court by the plaintiff under
the new Rule
32. It is further submitted that such credit
applications and evidence around the submission of such an credit
agreement would
be lead at trial, where the trial court would be in a
position to consider the evidence to finally conclude on the merits
of the
defence.
[26]
The argument around the amendment of Rule 32 is misplaced. The
amendment is only beneficial to a defendant and is not placed
in a
worse position. The opportunity to file a plea before summary
judgment proceedings are launched gave Mr Phiri an opportunity
to
place a complete defence before the court. This, Mr Phiri has failed
to do. Mr Phiri was granted a second bite at the cherry
in filing an
affidavit in resisting summary judgment and i
n
compliance with Rule 32(3)(b). Again, he failed to do that. Mr Phiri
must set out the “nature” and the “grounds”
of his defence. The words “nature” and “grounds”
are not synonyms or alternatives. Facts must be placed
before the
court to give effect to the word “grounds” in the
sub-rule. This must be done with sufficient particularity
and
completeness as to be able to hold that if these statements of facts
are found at the trial to be correct, judgement should
be given for
the defendant.
If
the defence is averred in a manner which appears in all the
circumstances “
to
be needlessly bald, vague or sketchy,
that
will constitute material for the Court to consider in relation to the
requirement of bona fides
”
(emphasis added).
[12]
RECEIPT OF THE 129
NOTICES
[27]
Mr Phiri denies, without amplification, that he received the section
129 notice. In
Kubyana
v Standard Bank
[13]
,
the
Constitutional Court considered this defence and held as follows:
“
[48]
It
is so that section 96(1) requires that notices be delivered “at
the address” provided by the recipient. However,
this
requirement must be understood with due regard to the practical
aspects of dispatching a notice by way of registered mail.
When a
credit provider dispatches a notice in that manner, the notice is
sent to a particular branch of the Post Office. That branch
then
sends a notification to the consumer, indicating that a registered
item is available for collection. It is never the case
that an item
dispatched by registered mail will physically be delivered to an
individual – such delivery only occurs if the
item is sent by
ordinary mail, which does not suffice for purposes of sections 129
and 130 of the Act.
If a consumer elects not to respond
to the notification from the Post Office, despite the fact that she
is able to do so, it does
not lie in her mouth to claim that the
credit provider has failed to discharge its statutory obligation to
effect delivery.”
[28] In support of this
defence, counsel for the defendant attempted to place certain facts
before this court by way of her heads
of argument. That cannot be
permitted and cannot be taken into consideration.
[29] The Bank is
obligated to meet its statutory obligations in attempting to bring
the notice to the attention of the consumer.
Having so met its
obligations under the credit agreement no more can be expected from
the Bank. The notice was sent to the duly
nominated address under the
credit agreement. Having filed no change of address with the Bank, no
more can be expected from the
credit provider other than to send the
letter via registered post, which was done.
[30]
Accordingly, there is no merit in this defense.
CONCLUSION
[31]
In
Absa
Bank Limited v Maritz
[14]
,
the
court found that it was not sufficient for a defendant to merely
state that the plaintiff did not conduct an assessment as required
in
terms of section 81(1) of the NCA. Something more is required and the
defendant was obliged to place more facts before the court
to sustain
the defence. This is so because the acceptance of bald allegations
that a proper risk assessment was not done will create
an unsafe
precedent in summary judgment application.
[15]
[32] Mr Phiri has
admitted to being in breach of the credit agreement and his
justification for doing so is inadequate. The defence
of reckless
credit and/or over-indebtedness is not raised without setting out the
grounds of the defence. As a result Mr Phiri
has failed to raise any
bona fide
and/or triable defence.
[33]
In the premises the
plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment and the following order is
made:
1.
Cancellation of the credit agreement.
2.
Delivery of 2008 LAND ROVER DEFENDER PUMA 110 SW CHASSIS NUMBER:
[....] ENGINE NUMBER: [....]
3.
Costs of suit;
4.
Claim for damages to be postponed
sine
die
.
L.
WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned)
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 5 May 2022.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the plaintiff:
Adv. Leon Peter
Instructed
by:
Rossouws, Leslie Inc
Counsel
for the defendant:
Adv. A. Theart
Instructed
by:
Viljoen Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
15 March 2022 (additional heads of
argument filed on 23
March 2022 and 4 April 2022)
Date
of judgment:
5 May 2022.
[1]
Act
34 of 2005.
[2]
Section
81(2) provides that:
A
credit provider must not enter into a credit agreement without first
taking reasonable steps to assess-
(a)
the
proposed consumer's-
(i) general
understanding and appreciation of the risks and costs of the
proposed credit, and of the rights and
obligations of a consumer
under a credit agreement;
(ii) debt
re-payment history as a consumer under credit agreements;
(iii) existing
financial means, prospects and obligations; and
(b)
whether
there is a reasonable basis to conclude that any commercial purpose
may prove to be successful, if the
consumer has such a purpose for
applying for that credit agreement.
[3]
2009
(5) SA 1 (SCA).
[4]
1976
(1) SA 418 (A).
[5]
At
[31]
[6]
2011
(1) SA 310
(GSJ).
[7]
At
[26].
[8]
2011
(4) SA 508
(SCA) at paragraph [18].
[9]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Kelly
(unreported
case no. 23427/2010 WCC).
[10]
2014
SA Merc LJ 24 by Michelle Kelly-Louw.
[11]
2009
(3) SA 363
(W) paragraphs 3 and 4.
[12]
Breytenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk 1976(2) SA 226 T at 228.
[13]
2014
(3) SA 56 (CC).
[14]
2018
JDR 0332 (GP).
[15]
At
[10].
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Devland Cash and Carry (Pty) Ltd v G4S Cash Solutions SA (Pty) Limited (2020/16910) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1130 (7 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1130High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar